New York at Philadelphia

Flyers 5, Islanders 1

PHILADELPHIA -- Philadelphia kept building its lead instead of blowing
it. The Flyers showed how quickly they learned the importance of playing
with a purpose for all 60 minutes.

Michal Handzus scored twice and Simon Gagne added his NHL-leading
seventh goal to lead the Flyers to a 5-1
victory over the New York Islanders on Saturday
night.

One night after blowing a four-goal, second-period lead in an overtime
win against Pittsburgh, the Flyers dominated all three periods and
showed no signs of letting New York rally.

"You just have to keep going and our players are starting to learn
that," Flyers coach Ken Hitchcock said.

Robert Esche stopped 19 shots for the Flyers, who outshot the Islanders
46-20.

Handzus scored the first and last goals of a four-goal first period for
the Flyers. He gave the Flyers a 1-0 lead off a one-timer on a pass from
Mike Richards.

"We really asked Michal to take a bigger bite," Hitchcock said.

New York's Mike York tied it on a two-man advantage, but the Flyers took
over from there. After the Islanders had the first four power plays, the
Flyers had the next seven. Philadelphia scored twice off the power play
on 12 attempts.

The Islanders failed to score with a 5-on-3 advantage with the score
tied and couldn't convert on seven other attempts.

"The beginning of the end was when we didn't get a shot on the 5-on-3 at
1-1 with your top power-play unit out there," Islanders coach Steve
Stirling said. "It was never the same again. It was a momentum-killer,
plain and simple."

Penalties continued to be a problem for both teams, with 27 combined
penalties for 68 minutes called in the game.

With players shuffling in and out of the lineup and players skating hard
to kill off the advantage, Hitchcock worries about the stamina of his
team. He's playing all three lines more than he has in the past.

"When you have as many penalties as what's going on right now, it is
really hard to keep a rhythm on power play," he said. "It's hard to keep
energy and that's why we use three units. If we're going to get seven or
eight or nine power plays, it's hard to keep that energy. Players get
tired."

With goalie Rick DiPietro out with a concussion, the Islanders turned to
backup Garth Snow. Snow couldn't keep up with a Flyers' offense that
scored from all angles.

Keith Primeau passed the puck out from behind the net to Patrick Sharp,
who scored a power-play goal for a 2-1 lead. Kim Johnsson scored less
than 3 minutes later for a 3-1 lead.

Then Handzus scored the nicest goal of the game. He knocked his shot off
Snow's leg and the puck bounced back as his body slid across the crease.
Handzus reached back with his stick as far as it could go and tapped it
in for a 4-1 lead.

"It doesn't matter what the score is on the board. We just have to keep
playing the same way," Handzus said.

After the Islanders were called for interference and a holding penalty,
Gagne scored his seventh goal, redirected from Eric Desjardins' pass
that made it 5-1.

"We started off fast and we kept it up," Hitchcock said.

Gagne has scored a goal in all five games. He said he had no idea he was
leading the league in scoring until earlier in the day.

"It's a little surprising, but it's early in the season," Gagne said.
"Hopefully that puck will still go in every night. I'm sure it's going
to be tough to do it."

Notes

Richards finished with two assists. ... C Peter Forsberg added his
league-best 10th assist on Gagne's goal. ... The Flyers are 3-1-0 at
home. All four games have been sellouts. Four of their next five are on
the road. ... Gagne set a career high for consecutive games with a goal.
... Flyers LW Donald Brashear was left bloodied after a third-period
fight with Eric Godard.

Copyright 2015 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or
distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The
Associated Press is strictly prohibited.